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Age of Innovation
Terra Mystica grows up, adds homework, and somehow gets even better.
Designed by Helge Ostertag (building on the Terra Mystica engine he co-created with Jens Drogemuller) · 2023
If you want a brain-burner with near-infinite faction combos and zero luck once the dust settles, this is one of the best Euros of the decade. Just don't bring it out at a casual game night.
Best for: Experienced Euro players who want maximum decisions and zero randomness
What it is
Age of Innovation is Helge Ostertag taking the bones of Terra Mystica and bolting on everything ten years of fans asked for. You pick a terrain color, draft a faction, then customize it with palace abilities, competency tiles, and innovation tiles before you've moved a single piece. Then you terraform land, build dwellings, upgrade them, and feed a clever power-bowl economy where spending now means waiting later. Reviewers flat out call it "Terra Mystica: Advanced," and that's fair.
The catch
Now the honest part. This thing is heavy, and not in a cozy way. The rulebook is text-heavy and won't hold your hand, so most reviewers say learn it from a person, not the page. Setup eats your table and your patience, the box ships with baggies instead of an insert, and new players get hit with hard faction choices before the game even starts. If someone at the table loves to overthink, that opening can stall. It's a pain to teach. Plan for that.
Who it's for
But if you and your group already speak this language, it's special. Players rave about the near-infinite faction combinations and how every single point feels earned, with basically no luck once the pieces hit the board. It's calculable, tense, and quietly mean in the best way. This isn't a gateway, and it won't win over folks who want a breezy night. For the brain-burner crowd, though, it might quietly replace Terra Mystica on the shelf. That's high praise.
What other players say
This write-up is grounded in real reviews and player discussion, not just one opinion. A few worth reading:
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